K. S. Joseph, M.A. (English); M.A. (Linguistics), M.Ed., Ph.D.,
teaches M.Ed. students at Titus II Teachers’ College, Tiruvalla,
Kerala. He has authored ten books and over sixty papers.
Check your answers
P
rose and poetry are the two main
forms of a language. Although
they are made of the same stuff,
they differ in quite a number of
ways. Poetry results when emotions
are recollected in tranquility. Poetry
is highly imaginative while prose
is often a matter of fact. Similarly,
poetry is designed more for the ear
than is most prose. While poetry
appeals to the emotions, prose
appeals to the intellect. While
sentences and paragraphs are the
main patterns of prose, lines and
stanzas are those of poetry. To make
poetry more appealing and effective,
poets generally make use of a
number of devices such as rhythm,
rhyme, alliteration, onomatopoeia,
repetition, and various kinds of
figurative expressions. As students,
if you know what these are and
how they are employed to embellish
poetry, you will be in a better
position to appreciate it.
- Rhythm
Rhythm is worked out through
recurrence of weak and strong
syllables in pre-specified patterns.
This is managed through foot
and meter. A foot consists of a set
Learning to
Appreciate
Poetry
learn it speaK it
number of long and short syllables. It
is the unit of measurement in poetry.
Meter indicates the number of feet
in a line. For example, trimeter
refers to lines having three feet and
pentameter refers to lines with five
feet. Poets choose rhythm that fit the
mood of the poem. They use long
lines to express moods of dignity,
grandeur, or sorrow while short lines
are used to express moods of gaiety,
lightness or delicacy.
- Rhyme
Rhyme is the
repetition of identical
sounds, at the end of
lines. The following
lines are an example of
rhyme.
Back into the chamber
turning,
All my soul within me
burning. - Alliteration
Alliteration has to do with
repetition of identical consonantal
sounds at the beginning of words in
a line. The following are examples of
alteration.
Down the drains the donkey drive
Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled
pepper. - Onomatopeia
Many words in English such as
buzz, cuckoo, crack, hiss, babble
have sound-sense relationship. When
poets select and use such words
in accordance with the situation
in question, onomatopoeia takes
shape. “The murmur of innumerable
bees” can be taken up as example of
onomatopoeia. - Repetition
This has to do with repetition of
certain words for the purpose of
musical quality and for emphasis.
The following are examples of
repetition:
Fallen, fallen, fallen, fallen,
Fallen from the high estate.
Alone, alone, all, all alone,
Alone on a wide, wide sea.
- Figures of speech
Figures of speech involve skilful
and artistic ways of expressing ideas
for specific effect. Simile, metaphor,
personification, transferred epithet,
etc., are some of them.
Answer the following in a word or
a phrase:
- What results when emotions are
recollected in tranquility? - If sentences and paragraphs are
patterns of prose, what do you think
are those of poetry? - While prose appeals to intellect, to
what does poetry appeal? - What does meter indicate in poetry?
- What is the unit of measurement
in poetry? - What do we call a set number of
short and long syllables? - Which device in poetry does
indicate sound-sense relationship? - What does repetition aim at in
poetry? - By what name is repetition of
identical consonantal sounds at the
beginning of words in a line known? - What do we call skilful and
artistic ways of expressing ideas for
special effect in poetry? - poetry, 2. lines and stanzas, 3.
emotions, 4. the number of feet in a
line, 5. foot 6. foot, 7. onomatopoeia, - musical quality and emphasis, 9.
alliteration, 10. figures of speech
DR K. S. JOSEPH